This small government AOS basis shell should be used for PRE-GASB54 financial statement presentations.
GASB 54 shells are available on the AOS Audit Employees Briefcase and / or AOS Internet / IPA Resources.
Auditor of State Bulletin 2011-004 mandated Governmental Accounting Standards Board Statement No. 54, Fund Balance Reporting and Governmental Fund Type Definitions for financial statements for periods beginning after June 15, 2010.AOS will not require regulatory basis presentations to revise statements presented for earlier periods.
o For example, a two-year audited presentation covering FYE 2011 and 2010 must apply Statement 54 to its 2011 statements, but may present the 2010 statements without applying 54.
§ So, separate presentations for 2010 and 2011 are not required, and one set of notes / opinion / GAGAS report suffices.
§ AOS-basis entities must apply both the fund balance reporting and fund type definitions when they adopt Statement 54.
§ Audit opinions would refer to the change effective in FYE 2011, but would not qualify (include “except for” language) for 2010 “pre 54” statements.
· Applying Statement 54 to 2010 statements is certainly acceptable, and even preferable. Opinions thereon would mention the change occurring during 2010.
[TOWNSHIP NAME]
[COUNTY NAME] COUNTY
Revised January 2012[1]
DELETE ALL HIGHLIGHTED TEXT
search and replace:
20BB replace with beginning fiscal year
20EE replace with ending fiscal year
TABLE OF CONTENTS
TITLE PAGE
Cover Letter
Independent Accountants’ Report
Combined Statement of Cash Receipts, Cash Disbursements, and Changes in
Fund Cash Balances - All Governmental Fund Types -
For the Year Ended December 31, 20EE
Combined Statement of Cash Receipts, Cash Disbursements, and Changes in
Fund Cash Balances - All Proprietary and Fiduciary Fund Types -
For the Year Ended December 31, 20EE
Combined Statement of Cash Receipts, Cash Disbursements, and Changes in
Fund Cash Balances - All Governmental Fund Types -
For the Year Ended December 31, 20BB
Combined Statement of Cash Receipts, Cash Disbursements, and Changes in
Fund Cash Balances - All Proprietary and Fiduciary Fund Types -
For the Year Ended December 31, 20BB
Notes to the Financial Statements
Independent Accountants’ Report on Internal Control Over
Financial Reporting and on Compliance and Other Matters
Required by Government Auditing Standards
Schedule of Findings (IF APPLICABLE)
Schedule of Prior Audit Findings (IF APPLICABLE)
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[ENTITY NAME]
[COUNTY NAME] County
[STREET ADDRESS]
[CITY], Ohio [ZIP CODE]
To the [GOVERNING BODY]:
As you are aware, the Auditor of State’s Office (AOS) must modify the Independent Accountants’ Report we provide on your financial statements due to an interpretation from the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA). While AOS does not legally require your government to prepare financial statements pursuant to Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP), the AICPA interpretation requires auditors to formally acknowledge that you did not prepare your financial statements in accordance with GAAP. Our Report includes an adverse opinion relating to GAAP presentation and measurement requirements, but does not imply the amounts the statements present are misstated under the non-GAAP basis you follow. The AOS report also includes an opinion on the financial statements you prepared using the cash basis and financial statement format the AOS permits.
Dave Yost
Auditor of State
[REPORT DATE]
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2
[ENTITY NAME]
[COUNTY NAME] County
Independent Accountants’ Report
Page 2
Insert AOS basis opinion letter
15
WORD PROCESSOR
WILL INSERT
FINANCIAL
STATEMENT
HERE
15
WORD PROCESSOR
WILL INSERT
FINANCIAL
STATEMENT
HERE
15
[ENTITY NAME]
[COUNTY NAME] COUNTY
NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
DECEMBER 31, 20EE AND 20BB
(Continued)
Note: UAN provides a proprietary fund type for townships. Should a township establish a proprietary fund (self insurance is the most common example of which we are aware), you should insert the appropriate fund type descriptions and make any other necessary footnote and financial statement modifications. There are examples in other example report shells which you can cut and paste into this example.
1. Summary of Significant Accounting Policies
A. Description of the Entity (Modify as needed.)
The constitution and laws of the State of Ohio establish the rights and privileges of the [Entity Name], [County Name] County, (the Township) as a body corporate and politic. A publicly-elected three-member Board of Trustees directs the Township. The Township provides road and bridge maintenance, cemetery maintenance, fire protection and emergency medical services Modify description of services, as necessary. The services should match the disbursement classifications on the “income statement.” For example, significant amounts spent for “public safety” may consist of the fire and emergency services described above. (Insert the following, if applicable.) The Township contracts with the Any City to provide fire services and Any Emergency Medical Services, Inc., to provide ambulance services.
(Delete if the Township does not participate in any jointly governed organizations and/or public entity risk pools.) The Township participates in ___ jointly governed organizations and the (insert name of) public entity risk pool. Notes ____ to the financial statements provides additional information for these entities. (Include the appropriate footnote. Notes 8, 11, 12 & 13 provide additional guidance) These organizations are:
Jointly Governed Organizations:
(Briefly describe each jointly governed organization.)
Public Entity Risk Pool:
(Briefly describe each public entity risk pool.)
The Township’s management believes these financial statements present all activities for which the Township is financially accountable. (Continue the sentence with the following, if applicable.), except the financial statements do not include debt service funds external custodians maintain. Note XX to the financial statement describes these assets.
B. Accounting Basis
These financial statements follow the accounting basis the Auditor of State prescribes or permits. This basis is similar to the cash receipts and disbursements accounting basis. The Township recognizes receipts when received in cash rather than when earned, and recognizes disbursements when paid rather than when a liability is incurred. Budgetary presentations report budgetary expenditures when a commitment is made (i.e., when an encumbrance is approved).
These statements include adequate disclosure of material matters, as the Auditor of State prescribes or permits.
C. Deposits and Investments
The Township’s accounting basis includes investments as assets. This basis does not record disbursements for investment purchases or receipts for investment sales. This basis records gains or losses at the time of sale as receipts or disbursements, respectively.
The Township values U.S. Treasury Notes and common stock at cost (or fair value when donated).<DELETE IF NO DONATED INVESTMENTS. Money market mutual funds (including STAR Ohio) are recorded at share values the mutual funds report. Modify this note as needed. Only describe investments actually held during the audit period. Equity securities (stock) are normally illegal, unless donated. Consult with the Legal Division if in doubt about an investment’s legality. Also, if equity securities have an impaired value deemed “other than temporary,” write them down to fair value. Consider consultation on the matter.)
D. Fund Accounting
The Township uses fund accounting to segregate cash and investments that are restricted as to use. The Township classifies its funds into the following types:
(Delete all unnecessary fund types)
1. General Fund
The General Fund reports all financial resources except those required to be accounted for in another fund.
2. Special Revenue Funds
These funds account for proceeds from specific sources (other than from private-purpose trusts or for capital projects) that are restricted to expenditure for specific purposes. The Township had the following significant Special Revenue Funds: (Include a one or two sentence description of any special revenue fund constituting at least 20percent of combined special revenue disbursements or are deemed significant. The following are examples that must be modified.)
Road and Bridge Fund - This fund receives property tax money for constructing, maintaining, and repairing Township roads and bridges.
Gasoline Tax Fund - This fund receives gasoline tax money to pay for constructing, maintaining, and repairing Township roads.
3. Debt Service Funds
These funds account for resources the Township accumulates to pay bond and note debt. The Township had the following significant Debt Service Funds (Include a one or two sentence description of any debt service funds constituting at least 20percent of combined debt service fund disbursements or are deemed significant.):
4. Capital Project Funds
These funds account for receipts restricted to acquiring or constructing major capital projects (except those financed through enterprise or trust funds). The Township had the following significant capital project funds (Include a one or two sentence description of any capital project funds constituting at least 20percent of combined capital project disbursements or are deemed significant.):
Issue II Fund - The Township received a grant from the State of Ohio to replace a culvert on Any Avenue.
5. Permanent Funds
These funds account for assets held under a trust agreement that are legally restricted to the extent that only earnings, not principal, are available to support the Township’s programs. The Township had the following significant permanent fund: (Include a one or two sentence description of any permanent funds constituting at least 20% of combined permanent fund disbursements or other funds deemed significant. The following is an example that must be modified.)
Cemetery Endowment Fund – This fund receives interest earned on the nonexpendable corpus from a trust agreement. These earnings are used for the general maintenance and upkeep of the Township’s cemetery.
(Note: classifying private purpose funds requires judgment. If the intent generally benefits the government’s own programs, permanent or special revenue fund classification is appropriate. However, if the intent is to benefit a specific individual, private organization, or another government which is not available to support the District’s own programs, trust fund classification is more appropriate. See Bulletin 2005-05 for additional classification guidance.)
6. Internal Service Fund
This fund accounts for services provided by one department to other departments of the government unit. The Township had the following Internal Service Fund:
Self-funded Insurance Medical Fund – This fund receives insurance premium payments from other funds to pay medical claims of employees enrolled in the health insurance plan.
7. Fiduciary Funds
Fiduciary funds include private purpose trust funds and agency funds. Trust funds account for assets held under a trust agreement for individuals, private organizations, or other governments which are not available to support the Township’s own programs.
The Township’s private purpose trust fund(s) are for the benefit of certain individuals, a non profit organization and the Village of X. (<Modify as needed. Omit ¶ if there are none).
Agency funds are purely custodial in nature and are used to hold resources for individuals, organizations or other governments. The Township disburses these funds as directed by the individual, organization or other government. The Township’s agency fund(s) account(s) for (describe nature of the most significant agency funds here Omit ¶ if there are none).
E. Budgetary Process
The Ohio Revised Code requires that each fund (except certain agency funds) delete the preceding parenthetical reference if there are no unbudgeted agency funds be budgeted annually.
1. Appropriations
Budgetary expenditures (that is, disbursements and encumbrances) may not exceed appropriations at the fund, function or object level of control (modify to reflect the legal level of control), and appropriations may not exceed estimated resources. The Board of Trustees must annually approve appropriation measures and subsequent amendments. The County Budget Commission must also approve the annual appropriation measure. Unencumbered appropriations lapse at year end. (Delete the word “unencumbered”, if there were no encumbrances outstanding at year end.)
2. Estimated Resources
Estimated resources include estimates of cash to be received (budgeted receipts) plus unencumbered cash as of January 1. (Delete "unencumbered" in the preceding sentence if the client had no encumbrances at year end.) The County Budget Commission must also approve estimated resources.
3. Encumbrances
The Ohio Revised Code requires the Township to reserve (encumber) appropriations when individual commitments are made. Encumbrances outstanding at year end are carried over, and need not be reappropriated. (Replace the preceding sentence with the following only if encumbrances are canceled at year end.) Encumbrances outstanding at year end are canceled, and reappropriated in the subsequent year. (Include, or modify the following sentences if you cited the Township under 5705.41(D). The Township did not use the encumbrance method of accounting. [or] The Township did not encumber all commitments required by Ohio law. [Delete the following sentence if the budgetary presentation did not require adjustment for encumbrances.] Management has included audit adjustments in the accompanying budgetary presentations for material items that should have been encumbered. [See ADAM 95-01: If it is not practical to determine material unrecorded encumbrances, delete the preceding sentence, and include a qualification or scope restriction in the opinion regarding encumbrances.]
A summary of 20EE and 20BB budgetary activity appears in Note 3.
F. Property, Plant, and Equipment
The Township records disbursements for acquisitions of property, plant, and equipment when paid. The accompanying financial statements do not report these items as assets.
G. Accumulated Leave
In certain circumstances, such as upon leaving employment, employees are entitled to cash payments for unused leave. The financial statements do not include a liability for unpaid leave. (Delete this note if no employees are entitled to these benefits)
2. Equity in Pooled Deposits and Investments
The Township maintains a deposit and investments pool all funds use. The Ohio Revised Code prescribes allowable deposits and investments. The carrying amount of deposits and investments at December 31 was as follows:
Note: The above is an embedded Excel Spreadsheet. Double-click to edit. Do not enter $ signs.)